[Date Prev][Date Next] [Thread Prev][Thread Next]
[Date Index] [Thread Index] [New search]

Re: Autonumber Format Question



Hello, E.A.

The H: that you describe below is called a series label. And the
autonumber series labelled H: are completely separate and unrelated to
any other autonumber series (A:, a:, B:, b:, C:, c:, and so on). 
Moreover, you can also have one unlabelled autonumber series in a document.
Some framers have experimented and found that that most of the lower-order
ASCII characters can be used to label a series...but a dozen labels are
plenty for anything I've ever handled.

Most people use only a few different autonumber series in one file or
document or template. It can be useful in military-specification or legal
documents, for instance, to keep interrelated heading-number series (section
5.1.3.c-a, or item 23.4.17.2.1.1.3) separate from a simple numbered list in
the body of text somewhere.

Regards,
Deborah Snavely, Senior Technical Writer, Aurigin Systems, Inc.



******************************************
Date: Tue, 01 Aug 2000 18:29:29 -0300
From: "E. A. =?iso-8859-1?Q?Tac=E3o?=" <tacao@conectiva.com.br>
Subject: Autonumber Format Question

Hi Framers,

I got the following text inside the "Autonumber Format" of the Paragraph
Designer box:

H:<n>

This <n> defines the kind of number appearing on the paragraph. But how
about the "H:"? Why (and how) is it set?

Thanks in advance!


** To unsubscribe, send a message to majordomo@omsys.com **
** with "unsubscribe framers" (no quotes) in the body.   **